Montgomery v. Ford

149 So. 679, 227 Ala. 249, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 217
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 25, 1933
Docket4 Div. 689.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 So. 679 (Montgomery v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Ford, 149 So. 679, 227 Ala. 249, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 217 (Ala. 1933).

Opinion

KNIGHT, Justice.

Bill by H. H. Montgomery, as superintendent of banks, exhibited in the circuit court of Crenshaw county, in equity, against J. G. Ford and others, who were stockholders in the First National Bank of Luverne, and of the Bank of Luverne, prior to, and at the time of, the consolidation and merger of said two banks into the new or merged Bank of Luverne.

The First National Bank of Luverne and the original Bank of Luverne were each doing a banking business in Luverne, Ala., at the time of their consolidation and merger into the new. or consolidated Bank of Luverne. As its name implied, the first named bank was a national banking institution, while the latter was a state bank, organized under the banking laws of the state of Alabama.

It is made to appear from the bill that these two institutions deemed it desirable to-consolidate and merge their business enterprises into one institution, under the charter of the then existing Bank of Luverne. To accomplish this common purpose, separate meetings of the stockholders of the respective institutions were called and held on the 9th day of September, 1930, at which mutual and reciprocal resolutions were adopted to carry into execution the merger scheme.

The resolutions and plan of consolidation contemplated and provided that the newly created or formed Bank of Luverne should have a paid-in capital stock of $50,000 — the amount of the capital stock of the original Bank of Luverne — and a surplus of $30,000. It was further provided that the stockholders of the old Bank of Luverne “should have and own thirty thousand dollars of the stock of the Bank of Luverne, when merged,” being three-fifths of said stock; that, for said $30,-000 of said stock, $48,000 of the assets of the then Bank of Luverne should be credited as follows: $30,000 to the capital stock of the Bank of Luverne as merged, and $18,000 as surplus. It was also provided that the stockholders of the First National Bank of Luverne “should have and own twenty thousand dollars of the stock of the Bank of Luverne, when merged, being two-fifths of said stock” ; that, for said $20,000 of said stock, $32,000 of the assets of the First National Bank should be credited as follows: $20,000 to the capital stock of the Bank of Luverne as merged, and $12,000 to the surplus fund, which was fixed at $30,000.

It was further stipulated and provided that the balance or residue of the assets of the two merging banks should be “credited in the Bank of Luverne, when merged”; that “the said amount so passed to undivided profits shall be first used to take care of any losses or notes or other assets of the Bank of Luverne as merged; said losses to be ascertained by a committee of two from the First National Bank and two from the Bank of Luverne, who shall be designated at present as consisting of Er. J. C. Ford, T. C. Aeree, H. R. Shows and T. W. Shows, Jr. In *251 the event said committee failed to agree, they may elect a fifth member or refer the matter to the stockholders of the Bank of Luverne as merged. In either event, a majority of the committee or stock present vote will be final.”

The resolutions of the stockholders of the original Bank of Luverne further provided:

“That, if the amount passed to individual (undivided) profits from the original surplus and undivided profits of the Bank of Luverne to said Bank of Luverne when merged, are not sufficient to care for any losses, then and in that event, the stockholders of said Bank of Luverne agree to an assessment sufficient to bring their stock to par in said merged bank as well as their pro rata share of a thirty thousand ($30,000.00) dollar surplus.

“In case the losses of the Bank of Luverne are less pro rata than the amount contributed to said merged bank as undivided profits by said Bank of Luverne, then and in that event, same to remain in the said merged bank but to be equalized by the stockholders of both institutions on a pro rata basis.”

Similar resolutions, stipulations, and agreement were adopted by the stockholders of the First National Bank.

It was further stipulated by the merging banks that the Bank of Luverne as merged should take over all the assets of the two banks and assume all their liabilities.

The bill avers that the amount passed to the undivided profits in the merged Bank of Luverne by the Bank of Luverne was not sufficient to take care of the losses, and that the stockholders of the said Bank of Luverne thereby became and are liable for an amount sufficient to bring their stock to par in the said merged institutions, as well as their pro rata share of the $30,000 surplus, pursuant to the terms pf said resolution and agreement, so adopted by the stockholders of said Bank of Luverne.

Similar averments are made as to insufficiency of designated assets in the undivided profits delivered to the merged bank by the First National Bank to take care of the losses, etc.

The bill Avers that “no assessment or ascertainment of the losses was made by any committee under either of said resolutions, •and that said committee never attempted to function, and complainant cannot definitely state the amount of the loss and damage to said Bank of Luverne under the said resolutions, but he avers that it will exceed the sum of to-wit, thirty-five thousand dollars; that the account, claims and demands of the respective institutions are exceedingly intricate and complicated, and it will be necessary that the matter be referred to the register or some other proper and suitable person to take and state an account between the two institutions under and pursuant to the terms of said resolutions, to the end that the correct amount of the loss and damage so suffered and sustained by the Bank of Luverne may be ascertained.”

It further appears that, after the Bank of Luverne was thus created and organized by the consolidation of the two banks on September 9, 1930, it had only a short career, going into the hands of the complainant, as superintendent of banks, for liquidation purposes on February 12, 1931, and that it was at the time it was placed in the hands of the complainant, and still is, insolvent, and that its assets will be wholly insufficient to pay the depositors and creditors of the bank'.

The bill prays, among other things, that upon final hearing the court will enter a decree against the stockholders of the respective institutions or each or either of them that may be found liable in the premises for such loss or damage as the said Bank of Luverne may have suffered or sustained, and for which, under the terms of said respective resolutions, they may be liable, collectively or individually, and for general relief.

The respondents demurred to the bill, assigning the one ground, viz., there is no equity in the bill.

The court sustained the demurrer, and from that, decree the present appeal is prosecuted. ,

The purpose of the bill is to carry into effect the agreement evidenced by the resolutions adopted by the stockholders' of the two merging banks, and which, no - doubt, formed one of the controlling inducements to the consolidation.

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Related

Wood v. Williams
192 So. 421 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 679, 227 Ala. 249, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-ford-ala-1933.